Public anger over appalling deprivation led to continued protests in Venezuela this past weekend, demonstrations which were brutally suppressed by the government of embattled President Nicolás Maduro. On Twitter stateside, Sen. Marco Rubio seasoned his commentary on Venezuela’s chaos with a triptych of wordless posts showing paired photos of dictators—Panama’s Manuel Antonio Noriega, Romania’s Nicolae Ceausescu, and Libya’s Moammar Gaddafi—before and after they were deposed. The Gaddafi tweet, which showed the former strongman shortly before his brutal public execution at the hands of rebels who were aided by U.S.-led military intervention, made Rubio’s meaning especially clear: Maduro needs to go, and the United States should make it happen.

This push for U.S.-orchestrated regime change is no surprise coming from Rubio, but regardless of its source, the proposal should be given no quarter. This is a humanitarian crisis, not a security threat. American military might is not the solution to Venezuela’s woes, and even calling for this sort of intervention may exacerbate an already horrifying situation.

Recognizing this reality does not require denying or downplaying the desperate misery Maduro and his predecessor, Hugo Chavez, have caused their people. Though Maduro’s present border closure to keep humanitarian aid out of the country is an escalation, severe shortages of food and other necessities have locked Venezuela in crisis for years. Infant mortality rates have spiked as children literally die of hunger. Inflation has reached catastrophic levels, and at every turn the Maduro government has responded with further corruption, irrationality, and abuse.

It is no wonder opposition leader and U.S.-recognized interim President Juan Guaidó has rallied so many to his cause, and it is only right to want Venezuela to look very different than it does now. Recent history should make the hubris, futility, and risk of an American military intervention just as obvious.

Rubio’s own example makes this point well. Is post-Gaddafi Libya a good future for Venezuela? Is that really a model to be emulated? Gaddafi, like Maduro, deserved not an ounce of power. But the 2011 NATO intervention cost much and accomplished little—or, at least, little we should want to repeat. U.S.-facilitated regime change in Libya was not a transformation from dictatorship to democracy but regime to no regime. Libya remains plagued by violence today, split between competing forces including a branch of the Islamic State. Venezuela, of course, will not fall prey to ISIS, but the constancy of human nature when power is on the line makes a similar turmoil all too possible.

Of crucial concern to the situation in Venezuela, where many advocates of intervention have made their case on humanitarian grounds, there is good evidence that U.S. action in Libya made the humanitarian situation worse. “NATO’s action magnified the conflict’s duration about sixfold and its death toll at least sevenfold,” estimated Alan Kuperman in a policy brief for Harvard’s Belfer Center, “while also exacerbating human rights abuses, humanitarian suffering, Islamic radicalism, and weapons proliferation in Libya and its neighbors.” However well-intended, military intervention in Venezuela could likewise prolong and expand Venezuelans’ troubles. It also makes the United States much more responsible for the long-term investments Venezuela will surely need if it ever hopes to rebuild. The very empathetic impulse that gives the humanitarian intervention argument its power should, informed by recent history, steer us to a more prudent path.

The mere discussion of U.S. military intervention in Venezuela is arguably risky, too, and Rubio’s Gaddafi post is particularly reckless in this regard. Threatening him with a gory death is unlikely to coax Maduro from power—if anything, it will encourage him to fortify whatever grasp on power he has left.

The prospect of U.S. invasion could also be a boon to Maduro’s cause, allowing him to rally support by pointing to past U.S. meddling in Latin America and painting himself as Venezuela’s champion against “American imperialists,” as he has done before. Already Maduro has been able to turn U.S. humanitarian aid (the food he won’t let across the border) into a political issue precisely because American help has been paired with talk of regime change: On Monday, he accused Washington of “trying to fabricate a crisis to justify political escalation and a military intervention in Venezuela to bring a war to South America.”

Unfortunately, Rubio has been an influential voice on Venezuela for the Trump administration, and despite President Trump’s campaign trail invective against avoidable wars, his policy here may yet be swayed by Rubio’s bluster. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Fox News Sunday declined to reject the use of military force when asked by host Chris Wallace, affirming instead that “[e]very option is on the table” and Washington will “do the things that need to be done” to guarantee Venezuelan democracy and “put force behind the voice of the Venezuelan people.”

The next day Vice President Mike Pence traveled to Colombia to meet with Guaidó, and senior administration officials who spoke withThe Washington Post indicated an announcement of military intervention was not immediately likely—which is not at all the same as saying a military intervention will not happen.

But that is exactly what Pence should say. As in Libya (to say nothing of other recent U.S. regime change projects, like Afghanistan and Iraq), there is no question the United States can toss out the dictator. Bringing peace and democracy to Venezuela by force is another thing entirely, as our Mideast misadventures make all too clear. Rubio is right that Maduro is bad for Venezuela—that is unquestioned—but it would be folly and cruelty to wage war to force him out.

Bonnie Kristian is a fellow at Defense Priorities and contributing editor at The Week. Her writing has also appeared at Time Magazine, CNN, Politico, USA Today, the Los Angeles Times, Relevant Magazine, The Hill, and The American Conservative, among other outlets.

This piece was originally published by Reason on March 1, 2019. Read more HERE.